Polanski Case: What We Know, After 40 Years

PARIS, France (AFP) — Roman Polanski, whose new film on the persecution of the French Jewish army officer Alfred Dreyfus is premiering at the Venice Film Festival, is still dogged by a rape case that continues to polarize opinion.

Here is a recap of the four-decade affair:

March, 1977

Roman Polanski mug shot from 1977, via Los Angeles Police Department.

On March 11, 1977, 43-year-old Polanski is arrested and accused of drugging and raping 13-year-old Samantha Gailey, during a photo session the night before at the Hollywood home of actor Jack Nicholson.

Gailey, later known by her married name Samantha Geimer, tells her mother Polanski plied her with drink and drugs and raped her. Her mother calls the police.

Legal actionPolanski is released shortly after his arrest on bail of $2,500. He faces 50 years in prison.

He is charged on March 24 with five offenses including rape by use of drugs and committing a lewd and lascivious act on a child under 14.

At the start of August, to avoid a public trial, Polanski accepts a plea bargain under which he pleads guilty to a single, lesser charge of unlawful sexual intercourse.

A legal agreement is made with the consent of the family.

He is sentenced to 90 days in prison. A psychiatric evaluation concludes he is not a danger to society and he is released for exemplary conduct.

But the day before the hearing to approve the deal, the judge deems the sentence insufficient.

On Jan. 31, 1978, Polanski flees to Paris, making use of his French citizenship.

The U.S. issues an international arrest warrant.

Apologies and excusesIn August 1994, after Polanski paid Geimer $225,000 in an out-of-court settlement and the maximum sentence had been reduced to four years, the prosecution summons him to court.

Geimer, to whom Polanski had sent a letter of apology, requests on several occasions that the court abandon the case.

Swiss, Polish reactionsWhile the U.S. tries to put its hand on Polanski during his international travels, both France and Poland — he has dual nationality — refuse to extradite him.

On Sept. 26, 2009, he is arrested in Zurich, Switzerland, on a U.S.-issued international warrant.

He spends two months in prison and eight months under house arrest at his chalet in Gstaad, in the Swiss Alps.

In July 2010 Switzerland eventually rejects the U.S. extradition request.

In 2014 Polanski is arrested in Warsaw.

At first Poland refuses to extradite him but in 2016 the conservative government reopens the case, eventually closed by the Polish Supreme Court in December.

In August 2017 a Los Angeles judge refuses to close the case despite the requests of Polanski and Geimer.

More rape accusationsAt the Cannes Film Festival in 2010 the 42-year-old British actress Charlotte Lewis alleges Polanski sexually abused her when she was 16, during a casting session at his home in 1983.

A second woman, going by the name of “Robin,” accuses Polanski in August 2017 of sexual aggression when she was 16, in 1973.

In September, Renate Langer, a 61-year-old former actress files a fresh rape allegation, claiming she was raped in 1972 in Gstaad when she was 15.

Two months later Swiss prosecutors rule out bringing charges over the latest allegations because the statute of limitations for the assault has expired.

Oscar outlawIn the throes of the Harvey Weinstein affair, Polanski in 2017 is forced to pull out of presiding over the “French Oscars” — the Cesars — after feminist groups had called for the awards to be boycotted.

On May 3, 2018, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announces it has expelled Roman Polanski from its membership.

The director, who had been a member of the Academy since 1968 and awarded in 2003 for his film “The Pianist”, files an appeal.